{"title":"How to Remove Grass Stains from Clothes","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/adulting/how-to-remove-grass-stains-from-clothes","category":{"slug":"adulting","name":"Adulting"},"creator":{"name":"Rachael Ray Show","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtbkymRCxreyNHb_ON2FCsQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dfJi49umT6U"},"tldr":"From soccer cleats to grass-knee jeans, a step-by-step grass stain removal method using detergent, vinegar, and water. Works on fresh and old stains.","totalDurationSeconds":248,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["soft-bristle brush or old toothbrush","spray bottle","small mixing bowl","white paper towels"],"materials":["liquid dish detergent (Dawn)","white vinegar","OxiClean or oxygen bleach","household ammonia","hydrogen peroxide","cool water"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Identify Grass as an Earth-Based Stain","text":"Grass is mostly chlorophyll and plant pigment, which puts it in the same Earth-based stain group as coffee, tea, red wine, and fruit juice. That diagnosis tells you the right solvents to reach for.You need a degreaser plus a mild acid to lift the green pigment out of the fibers. Two things to AVOID: chlorine bleach (it can react with chlorophyll and set the stain permanently as a yellow shadow), and hot water (heat denatures the fibers around the pigment and locks the stain in for good)."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Treat the Stain While It Is Fresh","text":"The longer grass sits on cotton or denim, the more the pigment bonds to the fiber, and once it dries it can become almost permanent. Treat it the same day if you can. If the stain is already dry, soak the spot in cold water for 15 minutes before doing anything else to rehydrate the pigment.Never run a stained garment through the dryer until the stain is fully gone. Dryer heat is what turns a removable green smear into a permanent one. Air-dry between attempts and keep working at it."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Mix the Earth-Based Stain Solution","text":"In a small bowl combine 2 ounces of liquid dishwashing detergent (Dawn works because it is a strong degreaser), 2 ounces of white vinegar, and 2 ounces of cool water. Stir gently with a spoon - do not whip it into a foam.Each ingredient pulls its weight. The detergent breaks down any waxy plant residue and helps the solution wet the fibers. The vinegar is a mild acid that lifts the green chlorophyll pigment without stripping fabric dye the way bleach does. The water dilutes everything so the concentrated detergent does not leave its own ring on the garment."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Test the Solution on a Hidden Area First","text":"Before you touch the actual stain, find a hidden spot on the garment - an inside seam, the underside of a waistband, the inside of a hem, or the tag area. Dab a drop of the mixture on it, wait 60 seconds, then blot with a white paper towel.If any of the garment's color transfers to the paper towel, the dye is bleeding. Dilute the solution further with more water, or skip the vinegar entirely for that garment. Most cottons and denims pass this test. Dark dyed sportswear and some brightly colored jerseys do not, so the test is non-negotiable."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Rinse the Stain with Cold Water from the Back","text":"Hold the back of the stained area under a cold tap and let water run THROUGH the fabric from behind so it pushes the grass particles out the front, not deeper in. This sounds backwards but it is the single biggest improvement you can make to your stain removal.Skip this step for delicates that cannot handle direct water pressure. For jeans, jerseys, baseball pants, and play clothes a 30-second cold rinse from the back removes a surprising amount of pigment before you even touch the solution."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Tamp the Solution into the Stain","text":"Lay the garment flat on a clean towel with the stain facing up. Pour a small puddle of the mixture directly on the green patch - enough to saturate but not flood. Use a soft-bristle brush (an old toothbrush is perfect) and TAMP straight down into the fibers.Tamping is not scrubbing. Scrubbing back and forth pushes pigment sideways through the weave and spreads the stain into a bigger blotch. Tamping is a series of straight down-up motions that push the solution through the weave to where it can work. Tamp for 30 to 60 seconds."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Let It Sit, Then Repeat If Needed","text":"Walk away for 5 to 10 minutes after the first tamping pass. Stain removers need time on the fiber - rushing the chemistry is why so many people give up too early. Come back and blot the wet spot with a clean white cloth and check what transferred. Green on the cloth means you are pulling pigment out.If a green ghost remains on the garment, repeat the tamping and rest cycle one more time. For stubborn old grass stains, add a teaspoon of oxygen bleach (OxiClean) to the solution on the second pass, but ONLY on whites or colorfast garments and only after the hidden-area dye test passed."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Wash, Then CHECK Before You Dry","text":"Launder the garment in cool or warm water (NOT hot) with your regular detergent. The pre-treatment did most of the work; the wash cycle rinses out the solution and the loosened pigment.Pull the garment out of the washer wet and look at the spot in good light. If even a faint green tint remains, repeat steps 6 and 7 and re-wash. Do NOT put the garment in the dryer until the stain is completely gone. Heat-setting a grass stain in the dryer is the most common way people permanently ruin a kid's jeans, soccer jersey, or pair of white sneakers."},{"number":9,"title":"Step 9: Bonus - The Same Three-Group Method Handles Every Other Stain","text":"The Madame Paulette's framework covers 95% of household stains by sorting them into three groups. Once you know the group, you know the formula.Earth-based (grass, coffee, tea, red wine, fruit juice, cola): use the formula from this tutorial - 2 oz detergent + 2 oz white vinegar + 2 oz water.Protein-based (blood, sweat, milk, baby spit-up, meat juice): mix 1 teaspoon household ammonia + 1 teaspoon hydrogen peroxide + 1 teaspoon detergent in 2 tablespoons of cold water. Same tamp-and-rest technique.Oil-based (grease, makeup, lipstick, hair gel, cooking oil): mix 1 ounce of degreaser detergent + 1 ounce of water. For stubborn oil stains add acetone (nail polish remover) - but ONLY on garments without acetate or triacetate in them, because acetone will literally melt those fabrics. Always check the care tag first.Three rules that apply to all three groups: always test on a hidden seam first, always tamp (never scrub), and never use hot water on any stain until you have confirmed it is fully out."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-25T14:59:28.873Z","published":"2026-05-25T14:59:13.899Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}